Unwanted Skin Reactions to Acrylates: An Update
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Chronological Development of the Application of Acrylates and the Appearance of Adverse Reactions
3. Acrylates in Cosmetics and Medicine
4. Acrylates as a Cause of Allergic Contact Dermatitis and Other Disorders
5. Diagnosis and Proof of Allergy to Acrylates
6. Allergy to Acrylates and Methacrylates in Dental Workers and Students
7. Preventive Procedures
8. Ways to Deal with the Unwanted Effects of Acrylate Reactions and Treatment
9. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Author, Year [Reference Number] | Examinees/Patients | Analyzed Factors/Methods | Results | Conclusions |
---|---|---|---|---|
Kanerva L et al., 1993 [64] | 4 patients (an orthodontist, 2 dental technicians, and an in-house trained dental worker) | Patch testing for allergens in dental prostheses | All patients had positive allergic patch test reactions to MMA. | Dental personnel working with prostheses had higher risk of sensitization. Patients working with dental prostheses should be patch-tested with MMA, 2-HEMA, dimethacrylates, epoxy acrylates, and urethane acrylates to detect occupational ACD. |
Kiec-Swierczynska MK, 1996 [63] | 1619 patients suspected of occupational CD (examined between 1990 and 1994) | Patch testing to acrylates and methacrylates including EGDMA, MMA, 2-HEMA, and TEGDMA | The most frequent sensitizers were EGDMA (5 positive patch tests), MMA (4), 2-HEMA (4), and TEGDMA (4). Sensitivity to acrylates was diagnosed in 9 patients (4 dental technicians, 4 dentists, 1 textile printer). | Dentists were more sensitive to (meth)acrylate allergens and other allergens (metals and rubber additives). Dental technicians were mainly sensitive to methacrylates. The textile printer was only sensitive to acrylates. |
Geukens S and Goossens A, 2001 [7] | 3833 patients suspected of CD (from 1978 to 1999) | Patients were tested by patch test | The top three sensitizers were EGDMA (17 positive patch tests), 2-HEMA, (14), and TEGDMA (6). Almost half the examinees (14/31) were affected by (meth)acrylate-containing dental materials (including dentists and dental technology students). | An increasing trend in dermatological issues associated with the expanding use of (meth)acrylates, particularly in dental professions. |
Wrangsjö K et al., 2001 [13] | 174 dental personnel referred as patients to the Department of Occupational and Environmental Dermatology, Stockholm (1995–1998) | Patch testing according to the Swedish standard series and a dental screening series. Testing for IgE-mediated allergy to natural rubber latex (NRL). | Hand eczema affected 63% of participants: 67% ICD, and 33% ACD. 59% of participants had positive reactions to standard series substances and 40% to the dental series; 22% had positive reactions to (meth)acrylates, primarily to multiple test preparations, including HEMA, EGDMA, and MMA. Allergy to NRL was recorded in 10% of patients. | Irritant hand dermatitis was the predominant diagnosis among dental personnel. Contact allergy to (meth)acrylate in around 20% of tested patients, mostly to 3 test substances: HEMA, EGDMA, and MMA. (Meth)acrylate allergy often coexisted with atopy and/or other contact allergies. |
Goon AT et al., 2006 [14] | 1639 subjects were patch-tested at the Department of Occupational and Environmental Dermatology, Malmo, Sweden | Patch tests for either dental patient series or dental personnel series including (meth)acrylate allergens and identification of common allergens and their prevalence in each group. | Positive patch tests for (meth)acrylate allergens were seen in 2.3% (30/1322) of the dental patients and 5.8% (18/310) of the dental personnel. The most common allergens for both groups were 2-HEMA, EGDMA, and MMA. | 2-HEMA is an important screening allergen to detect contact allergy to (meth)acrylates used in the dental profession. |
Isaksson M et al., 2007 [4] | A case report (dental nurse with facial eczema allegedly caused by airborne methacrylates in the workplace) | Patch testing with serial dilutions of several methacrylates and work provocations in methacrylate environments. | High reactivity to patch testing. Repeated exposure to methacrylates at work led to facial eczema; resolved when away from work. Efforts to collect the sensitizers using air pumps and filters failed. | Facial dermatitis may be associated with airborne methacrylate exposure, which may involve allergy to ≥1 allergens. |
Ramos L et al., 2014 [5] | An observational and retrospective study (January 2006–April 2013) | Evaluation and correlation of epidemiological and clinical parameters and positive patch test results for (meth)acrylates. | 37/122 patients showed a positive patch test with an extended (meth)acrylate series. 25 cases (67.6%) were occupational. Hand eczema with pulpitis in 32 patients: 28 related to artificial nails, 3 to dental materials, and 2 to industrial work. Oral lesions associated with dental prostheses in 4 patients. 31/37 positive to >1 (meth)acrylate. Beauty technicians with artificial nails accounted for 80% of occupational cases. | HEMA detected in 80.6% of cases; may serve as a reliable screening allergen. A broader range of allergens is advisable for accurate diagnosis. |
Muttardi K et al., 2016 [19] | A retrospective study of 241 patients who were patch-tested with meth(acrylates) and cyanoacrylates (January 2012–February 2015) | Patch testing with the mini-acrylate or extended acrylate series. | 16/241 patients had positive patch-test reactions to (meth)acrylate or cyanoacrylate. Female predominance (M/F ratio of 1:15). | (Meth)acrylate allergy is mainly occupational, but more common in younger women, especially beauticians and nail technicians. |
Havmose M et al., 2020 [2] | 1293 female patients were patch-tested with HEMA | Two groups of patients based on their positive/negative patch test reactions to HEMA. MOAHLFA characteristics analyzed for both groups. | 31 (2.4%) of the tested examinees tested positive for HEMA. | Sensitization and elicitation of ACD to HEMA primarily from artificial nail modeling systems; a significant health issue for consumers and certain professions. |
Gregoriou S et al., 2020 [6] | 156 female patients with ACD-using/performing cosmetic nail procedures (January 2009–December 2018) | The incidence of positive sensitization to (meth)acrylates assessed using patch tests. | Contact allergy to ≥1 (meth)acrylates in 74.4%: 88.5% occupationally exposed, and 11.5% consumers. A statistically significant increase in (meth)acrylate ACD from 2014 to 2018 (79%) compared with 2009 to 2013 (55%). EGDMA was the most common sensitizer positive in 72.4%. Among acrylate-positive patients, the rate was 97.4%. | A global trend of increasing (meth)acrylate sensitization among nail technicians and users of nail products with ACD. Enhancing preventive measures is essential. |
Opaliñska S et al., 2022 [3] | 8 women with CD related to acrylates found in hybrid varnishes | Manicure using a home acrylic nail kit and a non-professional UV lamp. Clinical and dermoscopic features were assessed. | Allergen contact areas (skin and nails) were affected. Severity correlated with exposure duration. Common findings: subungual hyperkeratosis and onycholysis (8/8 patients), eczematous finger pulp fissuring (2/8 patients) (more specific). | Nail changes from hybrid manicures may resemble onychomycosis or nail psoriasis (patch tests in uncertain cases). ACD was suspected. Confirmed acrylate allergies require patient awareness and avoidance. |
de Groot AC, Rustemeyer T, 2024 [1] | 24 studies presenting case series and 168 case reports on patients with ACD attributed to HEMA | Review of cross- and co-sensitization, atypical contact allergy manifestations, HEMA versus other (meth)acrylates, HEMA’s screening sensitivity, and its presence in commercial products. | Strong cross-allergy exists between HEMA, EGDMA, and HPMA. Reactions to EGDMA often from primary HEMA sensitization. Rare atypical manifestations of HEMA allergy include lichen planus, lymphomatoid papulosis, systemic CD, leukoderma post-positive patch tests, and systemic side effects (nausea, diarrhea, malaise, palpitations). | HEMA is the most common patch test-positive methacrylate; an effective screening agent for other (meth)acrylates allergies. Sensitization to HEMA 2% pet. in patch tests is exceedingly rare. |
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Lugović-Mihić, L.; Filija, E.; Varga, V.; Premuž, L.; Parać, E.; Tomašević, R.; Barac, E.; Špiljak, B. Unwanted Skin Reactions to Acrylates: An Update. Cosmetics 2024, 11, 127. https://doi.org/10.3390/cosmetics11040127
Lugović-Mihić L, Filija E, Varga V, Premuž L, Parać E, Tomašević R, Barac E, Špiljak B. Unwanted Skin Reactions to Acrylates: An Update. Cosmetics. 2024; 11(4):127. https://doi.org/10.3390/cosmetics11040127
Chicago/Turabian StyleLugović-Mihić, Liborija, Eva Filija, Vanja Varga, Lana Premuž, Ena Parać, Renata Tomašević, Ema Barac, and Bruno Špiljak. 2024. "Unwanted Skin Reactions to Acrylates: An Update" Cosmetics 11, no. 4: 127. https://doi.org/10.3390/cosmetics11040127
APA StyleLugović-Mihić, L., Filija, E., Varga, V., Premuž, L., Parać, E., Tomašević, R., Barac, E., & Špiljak, B. (2024). Unwanted Skin Reactions to Acrylates: An Update. Cosmetics, 11(4), 127. https://doi.org/10.3390/cosmetics11040127